You Begin
You Begin - meaning Summary
Learning the World by Hand
The poem addresses a learner with simple labels and childlike images—hand, eye, mouth, a blue fish, crayons—to sketch how we first know the world. It contrasts this reductive beginning with the poem’s insistence that the world is fuller and harder to learn. Words both name and bind things; language anchors perception yet opens onto more words and complexity. The recurring hand links teaching, belonging and the cyclic return to what is known.
Read Complete AnalysesYou begin this way: this is your hand, this is your eye, this is a fish, blue and flat on the paper, almost the shape of an eye This is your mouth, this is an O or a moon, whichever you like. This is yellow. Outside the window is the rain, green because it is summer, and beyond that the trees and then the world, which is round and has only the colors of these nine crayons. This is the world, which is fuller and more difficult to learn than I have said. You are right to smudge it that way with the red and then the orange: the world burns. Once you have learned these words you will learn that there are more words than you can ever learn. The word hand floats above your hand like a small cloud over a lake. The word hand anchors your hand to this table your hand is a warm stone I hold between two words. This is your hand, these are my hands, this is the world, which is round but not flat and has more colors than we can see. It begins, it has an end, this is what you will come back to, this is your hand.
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